The Huskies' fourth straight victory kept them tied with Oregon State forsecond in the conference, one game behind Oregon.

Any joy Washington may have felt afterwards was dampened by a serious neckinjury suffered by safety Curtis Williams in the third quarter. Williamsremains in intensive care at Stanford Medical Center.

'The good news is that there is not a break, but the doctors are very, verycareful to do anything except to offer uncertainty,' Washington coach RickNeuheisel said. 'It is just a very, very middle of the road, let's wait andsee.'

Neuheisel knows his team could have trouble focusing on Arizona.

'I don't think there is any question that it is going to be difficult,' hesaid. 'I know for a fact old number 25 would want it that way. We've got tofind a way to get up and play and to play with the kind of intensity he broughtto the game.'

To win the conference, Washington needs to win its remaining three games,against Arizona, UCLA and Washington State, and hope Oregon somehow loses twoof its final three games. The Ducks beat the Huskies 23-16 on Sept. 30.

The Huskies have won five games by a touchdown or less, and have trailed insix of their seven victories.

Arizona (5-3, 3-2) suffered its second straight close loss last Saturday,falling to UCLA 27-24.

Quarterback Ortege Jenkins rushed for a career-high 104 yards on 11 carries,but also threw four interceptions.

'We had them on so many plays,' Arizona coach Dick Tomey said. 'We neededone play today, and last week we needed one play (in a 14-10 loss to Oregon).Every game we need one play.'

Freshman running back Clarence Farmer got back on track last week, rushingfor 107 yards and two touchdowns after totaling just 20 yards on nine carriesthe previous week against Oregon.

Washington is 11-4-1 all-time against Arizona, including wins in four of thelast five meetings.